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Transplantation of encapsulated autologous olfactory ensheathing cell populations expressing chondroitinase for spinal cord injury: A safety and feasibility study in companion dogs

Prager, Jon; Fenn, Joe; Plested, Mark; Escauriaza, Leticia; Merwe, Tracy van der; King, Barbora; Chari, Divya; Wong, Liang‐Fong; Granger, Nicolas

Authors

Jon Prager

Joe Fenn

Mark Plested

Leticia Escauriaza

Tracy van der Merwe

Barbora King

Liang‐Fong Wong

Nicolas Granger



Abstract


Spinal cord injury (SCI) can cause irreversible paralysis, with no regenerative treatment clinically available. Dogs with natural SCI present an established model and can facilitate translation of experimental findings in rodents to people. We conducted a prospective, single arm clinical safety study in companion dogs with chronic SCI to characterize the feasibility of intraspinal transplantation of hydrogel-encapsulated autologous mucosal olfactory ensheathing cell (mOEC) populations expressing chondroitinase ABC (chABC). mOECs and chABC are both promising therapies for SCI, and mOECs expressing chABC drive greater voluntary motor recovery than mOECs alone after SCI in rats. Canine mOECs encapsulated in collagen hydrogel can be matched in stiffness to canine SCI. Four dogs with complete and chronic loss of function caudal to a thoraco-lumbar lesion were recruited. After baseline measures, olfactory mucosal biopsy was performed and autologous mOECs cultured and transduced to express chABC, then hydrogel-encapsulated and percutaneously injected into the spinal cord. Dogs were monitored for 6 months with repeat clinical examinations, spinal MRI, kinematic gait and von Frey assessment. No adverse effects or significant changes on neurological examination were detected. MRI revealed large and variable lesions, with no spinal cord compression or ischemia visible after hydrogel transplantation. Owners reported increased pelvic-limb reflexes with one dog able to take 2–3 unsupported steps, but gait-scoring and kinematic analysis showed no significant improvements. This novel combination approach to regeneration after SCI is therefore feasible and safe in paraplegic dogs in a clinical setting. A randomised-controlled trial in this translational model is proposed to test efficacy.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date May 24, 2022
Online Publication Date Jun 10, 2022
Publication Date 2022-09
Deposit Date Nov 24, 2023
Journal Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Print ISSN 1932-6254
Electronic ISSN 1932-7005
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 16
Issue 9
Pages 788-798
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/term.3328
Keywords Biomedical Engineering; Biomaterials; Medicine (miscellaneous)
Additional Information Received: 2022-02-21; Accepted: 2022-05-24; Published: 2022-06-10